This content is a poem titled "Solitude" that explores the feeling of lack as a defining characteristic of solitude. The speaker uses the imagery of a departing train journey to illustrate the emptiness they feel, comparing themselves to the absent elements of the scene rather than the tangible objects.
The poem emphasizes the physical sensation of lack, describing it as "knitted in my bones" and "in the spaces between letters." This feeling is further linked to a missed connection with a "Sylvia," whose absence is palpable in the speaker's description of her "hair kerchief sailing out the window."
Despite the pervasive sense of emptiness, the poem concludes with a glimmer of hope. The image of swallows nesting in the train station's iron structure, providing "an umbrella over arrivals and departures," suggests that even in solitude, life and connection find a way. The final scene of a woman waving to a man holding her hair kerchief hints at the possibility of reunion and the cyclical nature of arrivals and departures in life.
The author, Roman, introduces himself as a novelist working on a magical realism piece, suggesting that the poem's themes of solitude, longing, and the interplay of presence and absence may be explored further in his novel.
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by Roman Newell klokken medium.com 11-04-2024
https://medium.com/the-interstitial/solitude-8f55f2ee0fd4Dypere Spørsmål